JazzProfiles: Chet Baker – Love Nest (1997 Remaster)


Pianist Russ Freeman who co-led a quartet with Chet during the mid-1950’s expressed what a lot of us felt while listening to Chet Baker:

“Chet struck me as a giant player, then. You listen to the album we did in ’57, the one with SAY WHEN and that unbelievable solo on LOVE NEST, and you hear how lyrical he could be even while playing fast and hard. You know, he doesn’t have any idea what key he’s playing in or what the chords are — he knows nothing from a technical standpoint — it’s all just by ear. 

Of course, we all play by ear when we play jazz, but he has nothing to fall back on. If he had a bad night, which he had occasionally, he didn’t have any way to say ‘Well, okay, I’ll just go back and cool it and sort of walk through this path.’ He didn’t know how to do that — he had to rely on what his ear told him to do. And if he was not on that night, then it didn’t happen. 

But there would be certain nights, maybe once a week when it was absolutely staggering. To the extent where I would sit there comping for him, listening to him play, and think ‘Where did that come from? What is it that’s coming out of this guy? You mean I have to play a solo after that?‘ Now that didn’t happen all the time you know, but when it did it was like he’d suddenly got control of the world.” [As told to Will Thornbury in an interview that took place in June/1987].



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